scholarly journals COMPLEMENT FIXATION IN DISEASED TISSUES

1961 ◽  
Vol 114 (5) ◽  
pp. 605-616 ◽  
Author(s):  
Peter M. Burkholder

An immunohistologic complement fixation test has been used in an effort to detect immune complexes in sections of kidney from rats injected with rabbit anti-rat kidney serum and in sections of biopsied kidneys from four humans with membranous glomerulonephritis. Sections of the rat and human kidneys were treated with fluorescein-conjugated anti-rabbit globulin or antihuman globulin respectively. Adjacent sections in each case were incubated first with fresh guinea pig serum and then in a second step were treated with fluorescein-conjugated antibodies against fixed guinea pig complement to detect sites of fixation of the complement. It was demonstrated that the sites of rabbit globulin in glomerular capillary walls of the rat kidneys and the sites of localized human globulin in thickened glomerular capillary walls and swollen glomerular endothelial cells of the human kidneys were the same sites in which guinea pig complement was fixed in vitro. It was concluded from these studies that rabbit nephrotoxic antibodies localize in rat glomeruli in complement-fixing antigen-antibody complexes. Furthermore, it was concluded that the deposits of human globulin in the glomeruli of the human kidneys behaved like antibody globulin in complement-fixing antigen-antibody complexes. The significance of demonstrating complement-fixing immune complexes in certain diseased tissues is discussed in regard to determination of the causative role of allergic reactions in disease.

1962 ◽  
Vol 115 (5) ◽  
pp. 891-902 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert C. Mellors ◽  
Witold J. Brzosko

After intravenous injection in mice, rabbit immune complexes, solubilized in antigen excess and containing fluorescent antigens (BSA* or OA*) or fluorescent antibody, or both, were promptly localized in reticuloendothelial cells, and polymorphonuclear leukocytes, of the sinusoids of liver and the red pulp of spleen; in glomeruli and elsewhere in kidney; in capillary endothelium of heart and lung; and in hepatic cells. Thereafter manifold processes occurred. Within 48 hours the immune complexes were scarcely detectable in liver and splenic red pulp but now were localized in the germinal centers of white pulp where heretofore they had been seen only in trace amounts. This new localization presumably was associated with the antibody-forming activity of the germinal centers, for the immune phase of antigen clearance from the blood had already begun. Although the immune complexes were localized in various regions of the nephrons and their appertaining blood vessels, the initial sites of predilection were the glomerular capillary walls and intercapillary spaces. After 48 hours the immune complexes were still detectable, although in diminished amounts, in the glomeruli but had by now essentially disappeared from other renal sites. The localization of immune complexes in the kidney was associated with proteinuria and with structural changes which closely simulated in some instances those of human membranous glomerulonephritis, of focal and diffuse types, and consisted mainly of eosinophilic swellings of the glomerular capillary walls, intercapillary spaces, and basement membranes. There was a close correspondence between the distributions of the eosinophilic swellings and the fluorescent immune complexes. The renal localization and persistence of fluorescent antigens (BSA* or OA*), after separate injections in mice, differed from that of fluorescent immune complexes in several respects. For example BSA* showed predilection for the glomerular basement membranes and was localized sparsely in the capillary walls and intercapillary spaces; OA* was localized only in minute amounts; and neither was detectable in more than trace amounts at 48 hours after injection. These fluorescent proteins (of low molecular weights, 40,000, 70,000) did not cause glomerulonephritis within the time interval studied, whereas fluorescent immune complexes, containing on the average two molecules of antigen to one of antibody (with minimum molecular weights of 240,000 to 300,000) produced glomerulonephritis in some instances, in confirmation of the observations of others. Since the localization of the immune complexes occurred immediately and without known immunologic relation to the kidney itself, the selective physical retention of proteins by structures comprising the glomerular ultrafilters appeared to be of pathogenic significance in this form of membranous glomerulonephritis in mice, as perhaps also in nephrotic glomerulonephritis in man. If after injection of fluorescent immune complex, homologous antiserum was also administered intravenously so as to produce acute anaphylactic death, coarse and occlusive depositions of immune precipitates occurred in pulmonary, myocardial, and renal capillaries, and in hepatic sinusoids.


1966 ◽  
Vol 51 (1) ◽  
pp. 88-94 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Villanueva ◽  
S. J. H. Ashcroft ◽  
J. P. Felber

ABSTRACT The synthetic ACTH peptides β1–39 and β1–24 stimulated lipolysis as determined by the rat epididymal fat pad in vitro. The stimulating effect of these peptides was diminished by prior incubation of the peptides with antibodies produced by the guinea-pig against ACTH. The stimulating effect of these hormones was also diminished by the double antibody system used in the radio-immunoassay of ACTH and other peptide hormones, in which incubation with antiserum is followed by precipitation of the antigen-antibody complex by rabbit anti-guinea-pig-γ-globulin.


1959 ◽  
Vol 196 (2) ◽  
pp. 431-435 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. N. Kolmen ◽  
D. R. Celander ◽  
M. Mason Guest

Activation of the immunologic system either in vitro or in vivo results in nearly complete consumption of complement without activation of the fibrinolytic system. However complement activity decreased upon the induction of fibrinolytic activity even in the absence of an antigen-antibody reaction. Presumably this is due to proteolysis of some part of the complement complex since complement activity was found to be destroyed in the presence of small quantities of purified fibrinolysin. These observations are consistent with the conclusion that a) the components of complement and those of the fibrinolytic system are separate and discrete entities; b) that reactions involving complement fixation and activation do not directly influence the fibrinolytic system; and c) that activation of the fibrinolytic system results in decreases in complement through proteolysis of one or more of its components by the fibrinolysin which develops.


1953 ◽  
Vol 97 (3) ◽  
pp. 439-453 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joseph V. Jemski ◽  
John A. Flick ◽  
Warren R. Stinebring

The results obtained in this study indicate that serum protease is not activated by either a rabbit or guinea pig antiovalbumin-ovalbumin system, in vitro. A precipitin reaction occurring in the presence of a serum protease precursor of three species (human, rabbit, and guinea pig) failed to activate the protease precursor. Furthermore, particulate material as preformed precipitates could not be shown to activate the protease of either human or rabbit serum or their euglobulin fractions. The material presented seems to be further evidence against the postulated role of serum protease in immunologic systems.


1929 ◽  
Vol 12 (6) ◽  
pp. 825-844 ◽  
Author(s):  
Harry Eagle

1. Complement fixation is obtained in every antigen-antibody reaction involving the presence or formation of a heterogeneous phase (red cells, bacteria, precipitate). 2. The physical constants of fixation (temperature coefficient, velocity, quantitative relationships between the reactants) are those commonly associated with adsorption processes, and are the same in the three types of fixation studied. 3. All the in vitro immune reactions involve an aggregation of immune-serum globulins upon the surface of the antigen. It has been shown that the "fixation" of complement is an adsorption by the aggregates so formed; whether these aggregates are visible as a flocculent precipitate (e.g., sheep serum vs. anti-serum) or concentrated as a surface film on a cellular antigen (sensitized cells; agglutinated bacteria), the reaction is fundamentally the same. 4. As yet, it is unknown whether this adsorption is determined by the physical state of the precipitate, and thus, differs only quantitatively from that by Kaolin, charcoal, normal bacteria, heat-denatured proteins, etc.; or whether the comparatively enormous avidity of these aggregates for complement is due to a specific chemical affinity.


1971 ◽  
Vol 133 (4) ◽  
pp. 713-739 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mart Mannik ◽  
William P. Arend ◽  
Anthony P. Hall ◽  
Bruce C. Gilliland

Solid phase immunoadsorbents were prepared by coupling antigens to agarose. With this technique specific antibodies were easily isolated in large amounts. The γG-globulin class of antibodies isolated in this manner were not denatured as judged by their normal biological half-life in rabbits. Soluble immune complexes at fivefold antigen excess were prepared from isolated specific antibodies and HSA, human λ-chains, human λG-globulins, and a Waldenström's macroglobulin as antigens. In all these preparations a characteristic immune complex was encountered that represented the smallest stable antigen-antibody union. In the HSA-anti-HSA system they were found to be AgAb2 complexes, and Ag2Ab complexes in the γG-anti-γG system. These stable complexes fixed complement ineffectively. Also, a spectrum of larger complexes was present in each system, and these complexes fixed complement effectively. With intact antibodies the disappearance curves of immune complexes from the circulation were composed of three exponential components. The immune complexes larger than AgAb2 were quickly removed from the circulation with half-lives of 0.09–0.37 hr. Their clearance was not dependent on complement components, in that depletion of complement by cobra venom factor and aggregated γG-globulin did not alter the pattern of their removal from the circulation. However, when the interchain disulfide bonds of antibodies were reduced and alkylated, the removal of the λ-anti-λ, HSA-anti-HSA, and γG-anti-γG complexes was altered. In these experiments the disappearance curves were composed of two exponential components and the rapid removal of the greater than AgAb2 complexes did not occur. The immune complexes prepared from reduced and alkylated antibodies fixed complement ineffectively. The presented data indicate that the rapid removal of circulating immune complexes, containing γG-globulin molecules as antibodies, depends primarily on the number of antibodies involved. Furthermore, complement fixation is not involved in the rapid removal of such complexes. Nevertheless, the rapid removal of immune complexes and their ability to fix complement have similarities for optimal function in that both processes require intact interchain disulfide bonds of antibodies and complexes that exceed the AgAb2 combination.


1975 ◽  
Vol 74 (2) ◽  
pp. 215-225 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. J. Forman

SUMMARYTwo FMDV strains which had been previously differentiated by complement-fixation were compared by guinea-pig protection test, kinetic neutralization and micro-neutralization tests. It was found that these tests, which have not been previously applied by the methods described, were all capable of FMDV strain differentiation. Similar differences were found by all methods, which suggests that comparisons made by cross-CF, cross-neutralization or cross-protection involve measurement of the same antigen/antibody interactions.


1953 ◽  
Vol 98 (4) ◽  
pp. 291-303 ◽  
Author(s):  
Georges Ungar ◽  
Evelyn Damgaard ◽  
Fred P. Hummel

The activation of profibrinolysin in sensitized guinea pig serum when mixed in vitro with the homologous antigen was confirmed with a more accurate and more reliable method than the one previously used. A study was made of some of the conditions required for obtaining maximum activation. Profibrinolysin activation was also induced in normal guinea pig serum by addition of certain "anaphylactoid" agents such as peptone, tween 20, morphine, octylamine, octadecylamine, and 48/80. The specific antigen and the anaphylactoid agents produce activation only when added to whole, fresh, unheated serum. Profibrinolysin activation by these agents, as opposed to activation by streptokinase, seems to require the intervention of a kinase system (serofibrinokinase) inactivated by fractionation of serum and by heating to 56°C. Whenever serum was submitted to treatments which caused fractionation, fixation or inhibition of complement, serofibrinokinase was also inactivated. Under the conditions investigated the behavior of this kinase was indistinguishable from that of complement.


1968 ◽  
Vol 127 (3) ◽  
pp. 555-572 ◽  
Author(s):  
Thomas S. Edgington ◽  
Richard J. Glassock ◽  
Frank J. Dixon

The nephritogenic antigen, responsible for the immunogenic stimulus in experimental allergic glomerulonephritis induced with tubular antigen, has been identified as a renal tubular epithelial (RTE)-specific antigen and has been isolated in a relatively purified form. This antigen, RTE-α5, is a distinct and antigenically specific lipoprotein of high density which is derived primarily from the brush border of proximal convoluted tubular epthelium of the rat kidney. It has been suggested that this molecule may be a plasma membrane subunit. Immunization of rats with as little as 3 µg N of RTE-α5 in complete Freund's adjuvant has effectively induced this form of membranous glomerulonephritis. RTE-α5 is not a constituent of normal rat glomeruli; however, with the onset of autologous immune complex nephritis it is deposited in a granular fashion along glomerular capillary walls indistinguishable from the deposits of γ-globulin and complement. The antigenic specificity of this antigen and its tissue derivation has been explored, and the observations support the autologous immune complex pathogenesis of the glomerulonephritis induced in rats by immunization with renal tubular antigen.


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